Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

‘New York Times’ issues correction, admits boy in Gazan starvation photo has pre-existing condition

“We have since learned new information, including from the hospital that treated him and his medical records,” wrote a New York Times spokesperson.

A person cycles past the front of “The New York Times” headquarters on Eighth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan on June 24, 2025. Photo by Gary Hershorn/Getty Images.
A person cycles past the front of “The New York Times” headquarters on Eighth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan on June 24, 2025. Photo by Gary Hershorn/Getty Images.

Five days after it published a story titled “Gazans are dying of starvation,” The New York Times added an editor’s note on Tuesday stating that “this article has been updated to include information about Mohammed Zakaria al-Mutawaq, a child in Gaza suffering from severe malnutrition.”

“After publication of the article, the Times learned from his doctor that Mohammed also had pre-existing health problems,” the editor’s note states.

The Times credits the photographer Saher Alghorra for the visuals in its article. The media watchdog HonestReporting noted that Alghorra appeared to justify Hamas’s attacks on Oct. 7, 2023, writing that day that “the Palestinian resistance in Gaza” had fired “thousands of missiles toward the occupied territories in response to settlers’ attacks and incursions into Al-Aqsa Mosque.”

After the images of the boy circulated widely online, his mother told CNN that he suffers from a “muscle disorder.”

“You ran a front page picture of an emaciated 18-month-old boy to prove that Gazans were starving, when it was known at the time to everyone on social media that the cause of the boy’s condition was a congenital illness rather than a lack of food,” stated David Friedman, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel.

“You now claim to have ‘learned’ that the boy had a ‘pre-existing health condition.’ No one believes that. Given your despicable track record, it’s obvious that you just ran with the most dramatic photo to make your false assertion,” he wrote. “How do you sleep at night?”

“Shorter: We are so instinctively against Israel that we put a picture of a child on the front page of our global newspaper without verifying any facts about him first,” AIPAC stated.

Mike Wagenheim is a Washington-based correspondent for JNS, primarily covering the U.S. State Department and Congress. He is the senior U.S. correspondent at the Israel-based i24NEWS TV network.
Fighter jets hit multiple military targets in Tehran and across the country to weaken the regime’s ability to produce and launch ballistic missiles.
“The Iranian terrorist regime poses a global threat. Now, with missiles that can reach London, Paris or Berlin,” the military said.
IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi says “maximum military restraint should be observed, in particular in the vicinity of nuclear facilities.”
The initiation of the joint U.S.-Israel military campaign against Iran has precipitated a fundamental refocusing of regional priorities. This unprecedented military undertaking has forcefully shifted the geopolitical center of gravity toward the Persian Gulf, rapidly relegating the Gaza Strip to a secondary theater of operations.
“There could have been kids at this kindergarten,” said Rishon Letzion Mayor Raz Kinstlich.
“We are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts in the Middle East with respect to the Terrorist Regime of Iran.”